The Great Zaganza
Maledictorian
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2016
- Messages
- 29,759
Belief in something that isn't made of anything.
Soooo... Money? Capitalism? Nation States?
Belief in something that isn't made of anything.
Soooo... Money? Capitalism? Nation States?
Purely from a logical standpoint, it seems likely that a species with a dawning awareness of self and environment would develop some kind of rudimentary spiritual belief system to try to explain the things around them that they cannot otherwise explain. Where does the sun go between sunset and sunrise? What are those points of light in the sky and why do they change position with the seasons.. and why do the seasons occur anyway? And what about those wandering points of light that don't seem to follow the rules?
Soooo... Money? Capitalism? Nation States?
The Pirahã people appear to have no concept of religion, and seem to be content with no explanation for things they cannot explain.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirahã_people They have a concept of spirits but not as supreme beings or leaders. Although they now have considerable contact with modern society, they haven't developed religion.
So would you say that Shinto is NOT a religion? Surely something with tens of millions of followers, and which was the official religion of a country (in fact, a world superpower) at one point, might be reasonably argued to qualify as a religion.
Belief in something that isn't made of anything.
Money, capitalism and nation states are real phenomena. The power of the nation that guarantees the value of the coin or note is very real. National states are based on the actual power of rulers. Even nationalism, the ideology of national states, is a real phenomenon. That you can't find an ounce of physical substance in an ideology doesn't make it supernatural.
It's a short step from postulating gods cause rain to claiming gods must be appeased or there will be a drought or famine.One thing is that cavemen came up with weird explanations for rain, thunder and draughts. Another thing is that they came up with the idea of punishing and rewarding gods who could be appeased.
It's a short step from postulating gods cause rain to claiming gods must be appeased or there will be a drought or famine.
... the children in Beslan who were held hostage at a school by Chechen rebels:
Carat, 11: "I was hoping that Harry Potter would come. I remembered that he had a cloak that made him invisible and he would come and wrap me in it, and we'd be invisible and we'd escape."
Nine-year-old Laima draws pictures of what she saw when she was held hostage:
"I found a little cross on the gym's floor. I kept it on me for all of the three days. It helped me to survive."
If you can accept one irrational, made-up explanation, others will follow.
Are all sufficiently intelligent beings also highly social beings?
Primates, parrots, crows and dolphins are. Octopuses aren't. There is no way of knowing about the rest of the universe until we can ask them.
No. I think even for humans religion is something of an anomaly.
Honestly had the Christian/Muslim/Jewish religions not managed to follow the spice routes around the world I think the odds are good, not certain but good, that religion would have died off. The vague, less organized Earthy and ancestor worship religions would have faded quicker had they not had the Monotheism to really keep "religion" going.
Nuns Are Mikos@DallasDad
Judging by animethe Japanese have just as much trouble figuring out how Xianity works. Like, exactly what kind of magic do our mikos... err... nuns study, that it has to be a lifetime career instead of something you cosplay on weekends
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